Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Pense

  • Posted on the 3rd January 2008

Recently a Gfk NOP survey of a thousand people commissioned by the historian Peter Hennessy on behalf of the BBC’s Radio 4 Today programme suggested that almost eighty percent of British people still believe in our Monarchy.

As with all opinion polls, exactly which questions are asked and how they are presented (in this case by telephone) is of paramount importance in ascertaining whether a survey is of any justifiable significance.

Unfortunately however, it would appear that the data for this latest poll on the Monarchy commissioned for the BBC seems to still be held privately with no indication of whether it will become publicly available in the future.

In any case, at face value I think we can safely presume that this survey confirms what most people already knew; that the Monarchy is still popular in Britain among the general public - though certainly not among our governing elites, grandees and the liberal media.

The poll comes, not by accident, at a time when Her Majesty recently made history by surpassing Queen Victoria as the longest serving British Monarch, and also coincides with the annual release of the Royal accounts officially detailing precisely how much the Monarchy has cost the taxpayer.

The BBC’s employees, and in stark contrast to the vast majority of British people, loath the Crown and despise the Queen for her overwhelming popularity while quietly seeking to undermine her public image at ever opportunity. Peter Hitchens recently wrote that in the event of Queen Elizabeth’s death:

I expect that the enemies of Britain – mostly British themselves, expensively nurtured in our finest schools and universities and generously employed by our great institutions – will take the opportunity for a new and spiteful campaign against the throne. We now know for certain that the BBC will be among them.

As Peter rightly suspects, the British Broadcasting Corporation and its employees are not the only people or organisations keenly awaiting Her Majesty’s demise. There are also a number of reasonably prominent self-styled British republicans who continue to publicly campaign (though with little obvious success) against the Monarchy. However, their arguments seem to receive a disproportion degree of coverage (mainly from the BBC as it would rather strangely happen) compared to how many people agree with them.

One of these arguments by ‘republicans’ usually put forward at this time of year to coincide with the annual report on the cost of the Crown is that it is an expensive institution that the taxpayer should not be forced to fund.

Now, there are approximately 31.6 million taxpayers in Britain. The Monarchy, according to official statistics cost the taxpayer £37.4m during 2007. Therefore, £37.4m divided by 31.6m taxpayers equals an average of £1.18 per person. This contrasts with a report on Channel Four that I recall seeing the other day stating that the Monarchy costs each taxpayer in this country 63p a year (this figure it would appear is calculated by dividing the cost of the Monarchy by the entire population of Britain which is roughly 60.5m.)

The sum of £1.18 in itself does not sound a particularly sizeable amount of money at all. Neither does £37.4m in a year when you consider that Government expenditure for 2007 totalled over £600bn. What’s more, this care and attention shown for the taxpayer by republicans is incredibly unusual considering most of them are leftists and socialists and generally in favour of ever higher levels of taxation and public spending. In short, it is an argument against the Monarchy of sorts – but it is an extremely poor one.

By way of illustration, the figure of £1.18 a year as an average cost is comparable to the National Health Employment Bureaucracy (also more commonly know as the NHS) whose expense to each taxpayer on average is £3291.14 per year, the Police ‘Service’ for £1044.30, our contingent of six hundred and forty six MPs at approximately £4.74 (this does not including the running costs of Parliament just the expenses and salaries of MPs,) and according to research by the United Kingdom Independence party, our membership of the European Union costs each taxpayer £1632 per annum, this being inclusive of our seventy eight largely useless MEPs from all parties whose existence alone has been calculated at 22p for the past year. All these figures were derived from statistics located on page fifteen of the Treasury’s Complete 2007 Budget Report and a small article on MSN UK Money.

If ‘republicans’ were really so angered by the cost of our supposedly undemocratic Monarchy to the general public then surely they must be equally angered by the even more astronomical cost of the undemocratic European Union and its unelected EU Commission on the British taxpayer? Unsurprisingly, bar literally one or two names on the list of supporters for Republic (a ‘republican’ pressure group) all are exactly the types in favour of the EU in its current form (though there may be an extra ulterior reason behind this - but more on that in a minute.)

Now, I personally think that the Monarchy seems good value for money considering its fundamental importance to both our constitution and traditions in this country. However, on the other hand I think it’s fair to say I believe that the Police ‘Service’ in its current state and the National Health Service are incredibly bad value for money, as is our enforced contribution to the European Union. Yet, has anyone ever given me or anyone else in this country a real choice on whether I should fund them?

Moving on though, another of the usual poor arguments wheeled out against the Monarchy is that it is ‘outmoded’ or ‘outdated’ in our supposedly modern and highly civilised, society. As with many ‘progressive’ arguments (if you can define them as real arguments) for change, they stem from a wrong-headed belief that anything new is automatically an improvement on what has gone before. This is, of course, rubbish as has been proven time and again.

Yet, it stands to reason that if the Monarchy were to be abolished, as some very few would currently wish, then another system would have to replace it and fill the constitutional void left behind. The problem is that many of these same ‘republicans’ as mentioned earlier do not know with what they would replace the Monarchy. They know what they do not what, but not what they do want - a case of ‘anything but the Queen’. Most, as their name suggests, would want a republic; but what kind of republic? One with an elected President or an appointed one? Of course we actually have an appointed one of those at the moment already. He’s called Barossa, though he goes under the guise of being Head of the EU Commission rather than a President – but there really is very little difference in the practicalities of either position.

And, as it happens, José Manuel Barossa and his Commission are also particularly fond of attacking our British Monarch too through their never-ending torrents of EU legislation. For example this has included, among many others, the removal of the Crown Mark on our Pint glasses to be replaced with a bland EU ‘CE’ symbol and accompanying manufacture date. This is in essence one unelected head of state attempting to erase all trace of its predecessor – breaking the link between Monarch and people.

I suspect that this really why ‘republicans’ in Britain represent no more than a token effort to abolish the Monarchy and the Queen that they so hate. They know that the Monarchy is slowly and quietly being abolished by stealth as we speak, so why lift a finger when your work will be done for you?

Your Comments:

  1. It seems to me that one of the main reasons why republicans hate the Queen and the Royal Family is that they don’t know what they do every day. Since we only see the Queen on television a few times per year, many people seem to assume that because you don’t hear about her, she is therefore sitting around Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle every day drinking endless cups of tea. In fact, the Queen has over 400 engagements a year - pretty impressive for a woman of 81, I’d say. Other members of the royal family have similarly busy schedules, and do extremely important work, in, for example, recognising the contribution made my voluntary organisations and charities, the heroes of our society that would be unsung if it wasn’t for the royal family. Moreover, the recent programme about the monarchy (ironically on the BBC) revealed the work done by Prince Andrew to promote British business interests abroad, using his status and prestige to remarkable effect in securing inward investment.

    Through the work done by its members, the international prestige it gives us as a nation and the history, tradition and national identity that it embodies, the monarchy is worth every penny of the mere £1.18 it asks for us every year.

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